President Trump and Kim Jong Un walk from their lunch at the Capella resort on Sentosa Island on Monday. (Evan Vucci / AP)

Barely had the first summit concluded before plans for a second — and a third — were being hatched.

Kim Jong Un announced Tuesday he’d be happy to take up President Trump on his offer to visit the White House — and returned the favor by inviting Trump to Pyongyang, according to the isolated regime’s state-controlled media outlet.

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The Korean Central News Agency said Kim’s invite was part of a “radical switchover” in relations between the two adversarial nations. Trump had told reporters earlier in the day he “absolutely” planned on inviting Kim to the White House “at the appropriate time.”

Trump shakes hands with Kim Jong Un as they sit down for their historic summit. (SAUL LOEB / AFP/Getty Images)

The cross-invites came less than 24 hours after Trump and Kim sat down for a summit in Singapore that culminated in them signing a declaration committing to “complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”

However, the historic announcement was met with skepticism from foreign policy experts, who noted the document gave no particular timeline or concrete plan of action.

Critics blasted Trump for praising Kim as a “very talented man” who “loves his country very much,” even though the North Korean dictator stands accused of numerous human rights violations.

KCNA stayed clear of mentioning the denuclearization aspect of the agreement Tuesday, instead zeroing in on Trump’s promise to put an end to the “war games,” his phrase for the joint military drills that have been carried out by U.S. and South Korean forces on the Korean peninsula for decades.